Lucius Verus Dupondius - Loop Removal Tips?

Starting out 2018 bottom-feeding on eBay. Pretty happy with this one, a dupondius of Lucius Verus, Mars reverse (I'm still trying to attribute it - the TRP V on the reverse is stumping me). Just under $6.

Anyway, as you can see, it has a small loop soldered on. Any tips for safely removing it? Can I heat it over the stove to loosen the solder without damaging the coin?

Thanks, TIF. I think that will be my approach - manual tools. I ruined 2 Canadian silver dimes with the old stove method (small loss). I do love horror stories - do share!

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Well, it wasn't too horrible... In my first months of ancient coin fascination I bought bunches of "uncleaned" coins (what a misleading and just plain wrong term, in most cases) and experimented with various cleaning techniques.

I thought it might help to heat the coins to either burn off or loosen some of the superficial stuff. Well... propane torches do get rather warm and my attention wandered for a second and I got a little close. Some type of silver metal (lead, I'd guess) burst out in little droplets, like metal pimples popping. I don't remember what type of coin this was but it was likely a late Roman bronze.

Anyway, unless you know the type of metal and solder used for that loop, you don't really know what temp will be required for removal. Obviously someone put it there, so heat was used once. Did that heat damage the coin? Hard to say, given its condition. Probably best not to heat it again though.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Desoldering
You might enlist the aid of someone who works on circuit boards and has experience sucking solder. The concept of soldering is adding a metal that melts at a lower temperature and controlling the temperature. The question is whether the end result is worth taking it to a neurosurgeon or if the desired amputation could be done with the chain saw. I'd risk the soldering iron if it were my coin but not all mistakes can be corrected and this might just be another equal to the one that put the loop there in the first place.

Thank you all for your advice - I knew I could count on you. I like TIF's "sweating bullets" account - sorry that it happened, but it is instructive.

I have a lot of non-ancient coins with loops or pins attached (I have a thing for coins used as jewelry, love tokens, etc.). From time to time I've busted off a loop with pliers and filed gently. This works okay. But I've never had an ancient bronze with a loop of a different metal (silver?) attached. With all the weird things that happens to ancient metals (crystallization, enbrittlement, etc.) I am really hesitant to ruining my only Lucius Verus dupondius.

I think at some point I might try the soldering iron - I'd never heard of the "sucking solder" concept, but that sounds like what is needed.

Fortunately for everyone in my neighborhood, I do NOT own a chainsaw. Or a Bass-o-Matic '76.